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Analyst: Target should drop CDs


GA Russell

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58 minutes ago, Brad said:

Perused all the comments and I'm with Catesta. As far as putting albums on the iPhone space is not unlimited so I place very few albums on the iPhone. An option is just to use the iPod but that means fiddling with that while you're driving. Not a great idea.  With a 6 cd changer you can load them before driving so no  messing around needed.

All that being said, I realize some of us are swimming against the tide. 

Brad, it's not so much swimming against the tide, which I'd support 110%! 

It's simply lack of information (not meant disparagingly). In the time it took you to load that 6 disc changer (I had one in my '95 Del Sol), I could set up 50 albums to play, and in the order I wanted to play them, on my phone. 

Just as an example, let's say we were both taking a road trip. 

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On 3/3/2017 at 0:03 PM, Dmitry said:

Chris, I got to agree with Dolan 100% here. BT is so much easier to use in the car than cds, it's not even funny. I've resisted for a while, like some of you, but I'm a 100% BT convert now. Nothing like it for listening to whatever your mind feels like, on the fly. I've got Amazon Prime membership, which includes Amazon Music with streaming of pretty much anything your heart desires.

Amos Milburn - no problem. Andrew Hill - there you go. Trane - complete Atlantic Heavyweight Champion set at tour fingertips. It's amazing. No way I'm bringing cds in the car any more. My discs always get scratched, cases get cracked, beverages spill on them. I don't need the aggravation. 

They got to you too? All that time in the fresh air of Rhode Island must have warped your brain. ;)

Maybe I'm just lazy. I use my cell phone to make calls, receive calls, check emails and occasionally text. The thought of putting a bunch of music on it just does not interest me at the moment and seems to be a hassle. Now, with the new truck I'm going to be forced to have to do just that or use a usb flash drive. Otherwise I'm at the mercy of Sirius XM all the time.

At home I do sometimes use Bluetooth to stream from the iPad to a speaker source. Works fine but I still prefer my self-burned compilation discs.

I'll give an update after I experiment with streaming while on the road. I'll either like it or be reporting back that I installed an after market CD player or junked the RAM and went back to Ford or Chevy.

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I'm an old fashioned cd user in my car but for my work truck I use a USB stick as there is no CD player in it.  I find the USB a good option; I just use an 8 gig one and usually load up about 10-20 albums.  You can select between albums quite easily and you're not overwhelmed by a humongous iPod or iPhone playlist.  And most importantly you can easily pick albums or tracks  on the fly...something you can't easily do with a pre-programmed playlist.

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I might be interested in this USB stick idea.
Is it possible to shuffle the tunes on a stick
when you've got it plugged in - or does it
depend on what kind of system you have
in the car? I may want to do this on my next
rental car in a couple of weeks.

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Ahhhh, OK.
I'm expecting the upcoming rental car
to not have a CD player, but I'm thinking of
(hoping for?) the ability to plug a stick into
the dashboard USB, hit "shuffle" on the
dashboard display and be on my way.

Edited by rostasi
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2012 Toyotas and 2016 Subaru USB playback has a shuffle option.

I switched over to mainly USB playback in my cars. I have two 64 GB sticks (1 for Rock, 1 for Jazz) in my Camry. You can put a whole lot of music on a 64 GB stick. :)

There is a trick to get glitch-free playback with a large USB sticks like this though. You need to minimize the number of folders you use because then the file name gets too big. What I do is just copy the individual tracks onto the stick. I haven't had any problems since.

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7 hours ago, medjuck said:

Of course.  Are data plans all you can eat nowadays? 

Some are, yes. They do get throttled (i.e., they slow down the data rate, they don't cut you off) after a certain amount of data, but that amount is usually so huge that it won't be an issue for streaming music in your car--even if you do it every day on your two hour commute.

Edited by lipi
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Thanks Kevin for that info.
On the 160 GB iPod, I can get about 12-14,000 tunes,
but if I can make it easier by just plugging in a stick
(most of these here are 256 GB each), that would be nice.

I'm not too concerned about folders because I would just have files,
so it may not be a problem. As a backup plan, I'm still taking discs
and an iPod, but I'd be happy to find out that the USB stick works.

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15 hours ago, catesta said:

They got to you too? All that time in the fresh air of Rhode Island must have warped your brain. ;)

Maybe I'm just lazy. I use my cell phone to make calls, receive calls, check emails and occasionally text. The thought of putting a bunch of music on it just does not interest me at the moment and seems to be a hassle. Now, with the new truck I'm going to be forced to have to do just that or use a usb flash drive. Otherwise I'm at the mercy of Sirius XM all the time.

At home I do sometimes use Bluetooth to stream from the iPad to a speaker source. Works fine but I still prefer my self-burned compilation discs.

I'll give an update after I experiment with streaming while on the road. I'll either like it or be reporting back that I installed an after market CD player or junked the RAM and went back to Ford or Chevy.

Just think, those compilation discs ae what we now call playlists. And you could make hundreds of them by simply dragging and dropping. 

You speak of it being a hassle, yet you could create those playlists just as quickly as you create the compilation list, and blow them to your phone in a fraction of the time it took to burn the disc. Not to mention you can carry all of them with you every day, everywhere you go. 

15 hours ago, catesta said:

They got to you too? All that time in the fresh air of Rhode Island must have warped your brain. ;)

Maybe I'm just lazy. I use my cell phone to make calls, receive calls, check emails and occasionally text. The thought of putting a bunch of music on it just does not interest me at the moment and seems to be a hassle. Now, with the new truck I'm going to be forced to have to do just that or use a usb flash drive. Otherwise I'm at the mercy of Sirius XM all the time.

At home I do sometimes use Bluetooth to stream from the iPad to a speaker source. Works fine but I still prefer my self-burned compilation discs.

I'll give an update after I experiment with streaming while on the road. I'll either like it or be reporting back that I installed an after market CD player or junked the RAM and went back to Ford or Chevy.

Just think, those compilation discs ae what we now call playlists. And you could make hundreds of them by simply dragging and dropping. 

You speak of it being a hassle, yet you could create those playlists just as quickly as you create the compilation list, and blow them to your phone in a fraction of the time it took to burn the disc. Not to mention you can carry all of them with you every day, everywhere you go. 

15 hours ago, catesta said:

They got to you too? All that time in the fresh air of Rhode Island must have warped your brain. ;)

Maybe I'm just lazy. I use my cell phone to make calls, receive calls, check emails and occasionally text. The thought of putting a bunch of music on it just does not interest me at the moment and seems to be a hassle. Now, with the new truck I'm going to be forced to have to do just that or use a usb flash drive. Otherwise I'm at the mercy of Sirius XM all the time.

At home I do sometimes use Bluetooth to stream from the iPad to a speaker source. Works fine but I still prefer my self-burned compilation discs.

I'll give an update after I experiment with streaming while on the road. I'll either like it or be reporting back that I installed an after market CD player or junked the RAM and went back to Ford or Chevy.

Just think, those compilation discs ae what we now call playlists. And you could make hundreds of them by simply dragging and dropping. 

You speak of it being a hassle, yet you could create those playlists just as quickly as you create the compilation list, and blow them to your phone in a fraction of the time it took to burn the disc. Not to mention you can carry all of them with you every day, everywhere you go. 

15 hours ago, catesta said:

They got to you too? All that time in the fresh air of Rhode Island must have warped your brain. ;)

Maybe I'm just lazy. I use my cell phone to make calls, receive calls, check emails and occasionally text. The thought of putting a bunch of music on it just does not interest me at the moment and seems to be a hassle. Now, with the new truck I'm going to be forced to have to do just that or use a usb flash drive. Otherwise I'm at the mercy of Sirius XM all the time.

At home I do sometimes use Bluetooth to stream from the iPad to a speaker source. Works fine but I still prefer my self-burned compilation discs.

I'll give an update after I experiment with streaming while on the road. I'll either like it or be reporting back that I installed an after market CD player or junked the RAM and went back to Ford or Chevy.

Just think, those compilation discs ae what we now call playlists. And you could make hundreds of them by simply dragging and dropping. 

You speak of it being a hassle, yet you could create those playlists just as quickly as you create the compilation list, and blow them to your phone in a fraction of the time it took to burn the disc. Not to mention you can carry all of them with you every day, everywhere you go. 

15 hours ago, catesta said:

They got to you too? All that time in the fresh air of Rhode Island must have warped your brain. ;)

Maybe I'm just lazy. I use my cell phone to make calls, receive calls, check emails and occasionally text. The thought of putting a bunch of music on it just does not interest me at the moment and seems to be a hassle. Now, with the new truck I'm going to be forced to have to do just that or use a usb flash drive. Otherwise I'm at the mercy of Sirius XM all the time.

At home I do sometimes use Bluetooth to stream from the iPad to a speaker source. Works fine but I still prefer my self-burned compilation discs.

I'll give an update after I experiment with streaming while on the road. I'll either like it or be reporting back that I installed an after market CD player or junked the RAM and went back to Ford or Chevy.

Just think, those compilation discs ae what we now call playlists. And you could make hundreds of them by simply dragging and dropping. 

You speak of it being a hassle, yet you could create those playlists just as quickly as you create the compilation list, and blow them to your phone in a fraction of the time it took to burn the disc. Not to mention you can carry all of them with you every day, everywhere you go. 

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On March 3, 2017 at 4:51 AM, Rooster_Ties said:

How many CD's worth of music do you have on your phone?  Honest question.  That was always my issue, that I could never load even but a tiny fraction of my collection onto my phone.  Even my old iPod nano (which held at least 60-70 albums, maybe 100?) didn't even begin to hold but a fraction of my 3,000+ CD's.  That, and it's a pain in the ass constantly having to upload (and later delete) CD's from iTunes -- in order to change what was on my phone.  A complete switch-out of even 50 albums would take a couple hours (iirc), so I finally said the heck with it.

When I can grab 3-4 CD's off the shelf, and play 'em right in the car, why go through the hassle of the phone?  That's what I did in Kansas City, and I probably listened to 10-20 CD's per week, between the car and playing them at work.

I mean, it would be great to have all my music on my phone, but that wasn't possible (at least when I last bought my phone, which is an iPhone 5, with 16 GB).

Get an iPod Touch with 120 GB.  That is what I use.  Quite a lot can fit on it, and it is actually faster and more convenient for me to adjust the music downloaded on it as needed than find 3-4 particular CDs, take them with me to the car, store them, and then remember to bring them back into the house (without some of them falling on the ground, getting their cases smashed, and discs scratched). :D  

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Two thoughts about all this:

1) When syncing your music from your computer to your iPhone, there's an option to "Convert higher bit rate songs to 128 kbps."  You can then fit a lot more music on your iPhone, and you might find that 128 kbps is perfectly acceptable for listening in your car.  I've never tried this, but it sounds like it's worth a shot.

2) SanDisk makes a "Connect Wireless Stick" with capacities up to 256 GB.  Amazon has the 200 GB for $83.69.  It's wireless storage for your iPhone, serving as an external hard drive.  A lot cheaper than a 120 GB iPod Touch.  See it here: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0198QE5MA/ref=ox_sc_sfl_title_10?ie=UTF8&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&th=1

On 3/3/2017 at 1:37 PM, Brad said:

An option is just to use the iPod but that means fiddling with that while you're driving.

Over the years, my household has collected a bunch of old iPods that are virtually useless because the batteries died.  These are perfect to use in the car.  I leave one in the center compartment plugged into the USB port.  I don't have to worry about battery life, because it draws its power from the car through the 30-pin connector.  As for fiddling, I have it on random play, so it's like listening to the radio.  I resync every couple of months to put new music on the iPod.

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On 3/3/2017 at 2:51 PM, Rooster_Ties said:

How many CD's worth of music do you have on your phone?  Honest question.  That was always my issue, that I could never load even but a tiny fraction of my collection onto my phone.  Even my old iPod nano (which held at least 60-70 albums, maybe 100?) didn't even begin to hold but a fraction of my 3,000+ CD's.  That, and it's a pain in the ass constantly having to upload (and later delete) CD's from iTunes -- in order to change what was on my phone.  A complete switch-out of even 50 albums would take a couple hours (iirc), so I finally said the heck with it.

When I can grab 3-4 CD's off the shelf, and play 'em right in the car, why go through the hassle of the phone?  That's what I did in Kansas City, and I probably listened to 10-20 CD's per week, between the car and playing them at work.

I mean, it would be great to have all my music on my phone, but that wasn't possible (at least when I last bought my phone, which is an iPhone 5, with 16 GB).

You don't have to sync your entire iTunes library to your phone - you can selectively sync only certain songs or albums. So you can maintain a large music library in iTunes but only load a small portion of it on your phone:

https://www.lifewire.com/itunes-sync-only-certain-songs-1999555

Also, to add to what Scott said earlier about backing up your phone to iTunes on your computer, IMO an iTunes backup is preferable to an iCloud backup because an iCloud backup is not as complete as an iTunes backup is - I forget the details, but iCloud backups only capture key data like Contacts, Photos, etc. If you want to be able to reset your phone to factory settings and restore it exactly as it was including all app data and settings, you need to do an iTunes backup. I highly recommend doing an iTunes backup before every iOS upgrade as well, as I've had to restore a phone from a backup before when an upgrade bricked the phone.

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I can see how it would be so convenient to use a phone and blue-tooth. . . .But I guess I actually prefer inconvenience. I'm retired, I enjoy all my discs and don't do files or stream. I don't have any music on a phone and have the cheapest plan I can get with a very basic phone as I don't use one for business and don't really like phones, and I'm so glad that the car I bought last summer (Nissan Juke NISMO) has a cd player; I really enjoy selecting a few discs to take with me on trips to my Dad's and back (not quite three hours round trip) and I also listen to the great listener supported classical radio station here in the Cleveland area a lot.

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2 hours ago, Kevin Bresnahan said:

I convert all of my music to mp3 at VBR Q1.

???

What is that? I know what mp3 and VBR are, but Q1? 

2 hours ago, jazzbo said:

I can see how it would be so convenient to use a phone and blue-tooth. . . .But I guess I actually prefer inconvenience. I'm retired, I enjoy all my discs and don't do files or stream. I don't have any music on a phone and have the cheapest plan I can get with a very basic phone as I don't use one for business and don't really like phones, and I'm so glad that the car I bought last summer (Nissan Juke NISMO) has a cd player; I really enjoy selecting a few discs to take with me on trips to my Dad's and back (not quite three hours round trip) and I also listen to the great listener supported classical radio station here in the Cleveland area a lot.

Oddly enough, my Juke came with an iPod connection inmthe glove compartment. Up to that point I had never owned any Apple gear. I eventually broke down and sprung for an iPod Touch. 

Now every computer and device I own is Apple! 

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I have Apple laptops, I love them, been using Apple computers at home since the mid-nineties. I have an iPod but I gave up using it. . . I actually enjoy NOT having music on the go, I really don't like the sound quality and I prefer to listen to my system at home, makes me appreciate music more this way. It's only the last few years I've had a car (was a motorcycle only guy for a few decades before moving back to Ohio) and so I'm really not used to music while driving. . . but I do enjoy the sound system in my Juke (it's the better of the two systems they put in these). It has a USB inlet but I'm not interested in using it. 

Realistically I have to see that "convenience" drives a lot of users and products in the audio world this century. . . but "convenience" isn't something that I really look for or revel in. I still like the inconvenient ways of cd and vinyl usage. Just suits me, I know that others have moved way beyond that. . . .

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I had to use older Macs running OS 9 at work, so I avoided Apple at home because I found OS 9 to be an absolute nightmare. Plus, I always felt Apple products were overpriced. It wasn't until I spent time with that iPod, admiring the absurdly high build quality, that I finally converted. 

That and the disaster that was Windows Vista drove me completely into the arms of Apple. 

Did you get the CVT, or 6spd manual? 

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